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  They came to build China’s EV future. Investigators found conditions akin to ‘slavery.’ Dozens of Chinese men were getting off a bus and heading into a pair of squat two-story buildings at the end of the road. Oliveira assumed the outsiders had some type of meeting and would soon be on their way. She’d been inside the structures, painted dark green, and knew they weren’t nearly big enough to house them all. But one day turned to the next, and soon Oliveira realized her new neighbors — 56 itinerant Chinese laborers, none of whom spoke any Portuguese — were here to stay. As weeks passed, Oliveira’s curiosity deepened. Their food was prepared in an improvised kitchen in the garage, amid industrial detritus and vermin, and they never seemed to do anything for fun. All they did was work. “Seven days a week,” Oliveira, 35, recalled. “Sunday to Sunday. I never saw any taking a day off.” They departed every morning at dawn and didn’t return until dusk. The hours in between were spent hel...
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  Breakingviews - China's property reset comes with a heavy price HONG KONG, March 10 (Reuters Breakingviews) - There is no doubt that China’s real-estate bubble needed popping. Beijing has spent nearly a decade letting air out of the country's historically speculative property market, which at times powered a  quarter  of the world’s second-largest economy. However, the structural distortions that fed the bubble still exist, while the cleanup is exerting a lasting drag on growth. For years, real estate soaked up Chinese ​savings, drove urbanisation and bankrolled local governments, who partly relied on land sales for income. Easy credit, perceived implicit state backing and a lack of attractive investment alternatives all pushed households and developers to ‌bet on ever-rising prices. So entrenched was the mania that few people took Xi Jinping seriously in 2016 when the Chinese president  declared  that houses are for living in, not for speculation. The Reuters...
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  How Does This End? Four Scenarios for What Comes Next With Iran. March 10, 2026,  5:00 p.m. ET Credit... Atta Kenare/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Listen · 5:46 min 151 Opinion Columnist The most famous query in the history of modern warfare came from David Petraeus, then a major general, in an interview with  Rick Atkinson , then a reporter, during the initial assault on Iraq: “Tell me how this ends.” When it comes to the war in Iran, there are, broadly speaking, four possible scenarios. Regime change is the most optimistic one. Some imagine it will take the form of the resumption of the mass demonstrations that the regime bloodily stamped out in January — millions of Iranians marching in dozens of cities, joined by police officers and soldiers and commanders from the conventional army, emboldened by American and Israeli air support, rising to tear down their rulers’ enfeebled apparatus of repression. Nobody should discount this scenario, especially if Iran conti...
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  The enduring logic of US Taiwan policy | Brookings Richard C. Bush  and  Ryan Hass March 4, 2026 A photo illustration shows a pin depicting the Taiwan and U.S. flags, during Taiwan President Lai Ching-te's visit in Honolulu, Hawaii, on November 30, 2024. (Akio Wang/AFP via Getty Images 31 min read Few issues in America’s diplomatic portfolio are more sensitive or consequential than America’s approach to Taiwan and cross-Strait relations. The words and actions that leaders in Beijing, Taipei, and Washington embrace have the power to move markets and carry implications for war and peace. Given the stakes, it is necessary and important for America’s leaders and their advisors to understand the logic underpinning America’s strategy and policy on Taiwan. In the following transcript of an interview between Ryan Hass and Richard Bush on February 17, 2026, the two examine the cumulative decisions that led to the current cross-Strait situation, whether America’s long-standing ap...